The occurrence of rust fungi on Corydalis bungeana Turcz. and Salix babylonica L. were found in same area of Hebei Province, China from 2022 to 2023. The life cycle connection of these rust fungi was suspected because Peng et al. (2022) reported the life cycle of Melampsora ferrinii Toome & Aime by inoculations, producing spermogonia and aecia on Corydalis species, and uredinia on S. babylonica. The morphology of the uredinial and telial stages on S. babylonica collected in the field was identical with the description of M. ferrinii by Toome and Aime (2015), and its identity was confirmed by phylogenetic analyses using the method of Ji et al. (2020) (LSU-PP087777, ITS-PP091274; Similarity with M. ferrinii: LSU-100%, ITS-99.85%). To confirm the life cycle of this rust fungus, inoculations were conducted on C. bungeana with basidiospores obtained from the teliospores on fallen leaves of Salix babylonica. The fallen leaves producing basidiospores were cut into small pieces (ca. 5 mm2) and placed on healthy leaves of C. bungeana. The inoculated plants were kept in a moist plastic box in darkness at 15-20℃ for 2 days and then transferred to the floor near windows at about 15-20℃ for observations. Ten days after inoculations small yellow spots of spermogonia appeared on the upper surface of the leaves of C. bungeana. About 7 days later, pale yellow aecia with aeciospores were produced mainly on the under surface of the leaves and petioles. The morphology of rust fungus on C. bungeana collected from the fields and obtained by inoculations was identical with the description by Peng et al. (2022). Phylogenetic analyses also showed that a specimen on C. bungeana collected from the field (LSU-OR607838, ITS-OR612063) were included into the same clade of M. ferrinii (Similarity: LSU-100 %, ITS-99.85). Based on morphology, inoculations and DNA sequence analyses, the rust fungi on C. bungeana and S. babylonica are identified as different stages of life cycle of M. ferrinii. This rust fungus has been reported to produce spermogonia and aecia on C. acuminata Franch., C. edulis Maxim. and C. racemosa (Thunb.) Pers. in China (Peng et al. 2022), and uredinia and telia on S. babylonica in USA, Argentina and Iran (Toome and Aime 2015, Abbasi et al. 2024), and on Salix sp. in Chile (Zapata 2016). Therefore, C. bungeana is a new host for M. ferrinii, and its field occurrence on S. babylonica is reported for the first time in China although Peng et al. (2022) reported successful results in its inoculations to S. babylonica in China. This report contributes to the control of rust diseases caused by this species. Specimens used in this experiment were deposited in the Fungal Herbarium of the Jilin Agricultural University, Changchun, China (HMJAU) and sequences newly analyzed were deposited in GenBank.